Dell Dumps Netbook Line For "Thin & Powerful" Notebooks
Dell has killed off its consumer-based "Mini" netbook line to focus on high-end notebooks and ultrabooks.
On Thursday Dell consumers began reporting that the company's "Mini" line of netbooks had been removed from the website and replaced with a message stating that they are no longer available. "Shop the next best thing - the Inspiron 14R, a stylish and portable 14-inch laptop with SWITCHable lids," the message added.
The stealthy product removal was quiet to say the least, and prior to this report, Dell hadn't publicly announced an official departure from the netbook sector. So what's going on? Wanting to get to the root of the mystery, Liliputing pulled out the magnifying glass, the Scooby Snacks, and investigated the forum reports. The site confirmed that the product page for the Dell Inspiron Mini 1012 listed the netbook as unavailable. Also unavailable was the Dell Inspiron Duo convertible tablet-style netbook, and both the 9-inch and 10-inch Dell netbook were removed from Dell’s Outlet store.
Yet technically Dell hasn't parted ways with the netbook form factor, as the company still offers netbook solutions for business customers. One example is the Dell Latitude 2120 with a starting price of $469, one of the most expensive Intel Atom-powered netbooks on the market. The company also confirmed on Friday that the consumer-based Inspiron Duo is still an active product, and will be available again sometime before Christmas.
With the evidence out in the open, Dell finally came clean and admitted that it is no longer offering consumer-based Mini netbooks 10-inches or smaller. Even more, Dell has no plans to release future models based on Intel's forthcoming Cedar Trail platform, thus marking the Mini line as officially dead and buried. The company said it will instead focus on higher-end premium laptops like the XPS 14z and that new form factor called "ultrabook."
"Thin and powerful is where it is at for us," said Dell Marketing Director Alison Gardner.

Now that phones are catching up, Netbooks are becoming redundant. Many people caught in the early Netbook craze have their needs filled by their phones now, while Notebooks are still needed by people who need a portable full sized PC experience. Ultrabooks will still largely be a boutique item for people who are after the thin form factor and are willing to spend for it. The only market Netbooks had is being quickly gobbled up by smart phones, and the few people who desire a slightly larger screen (but still smaller than a notebook) now have tablets to fill that void.
What we're really looking for here is a central server (lolcloud) to handle applications we want on all of our devices (office package for example) not putting performance/latency dependent applications on there (which seems to be the fancy of many a tech blogger).
Personally, I would want something on a netbook/slightly bigger scale than having the ever expanding screen of a laptop for 'portable' work. With desktops for when the real business needs to get done.
Hell, at home when working, I connect the laptop to the desktop screen and peripherals to get anything done. Something that could be done using a) the desktop with shared applications from the cloud or b) the much more portalable netbook.
Laptops have so much bloat these days, I don't need a trackpad (a small trackball would be much nicer), a dvd drive (easiliy replaceable by the 'cloud' I keep having rammed down my throat)
they can't , intel pays them too much
They do make AMD systems, but only on last years platform.
they don't make any AMD notebooks
HP, toshiba, Gateway, lenovo have one or two models only, a nice start
I bought a netbook with N550 atom cpu and 2GB ram in November 2010. I've been very happy with my netbook. I even finished my PhD Thesis with it!
I'll keep using it and future netbook, not because it is cheap, but because it is enough for me.
I bought a netbook with atom N550 cpu and 2GB ram in November 2010. I've been very happy with it, and I've been using it as my primary PC. I even completed my PhD Thesis with it!
I will keep using it and future netbooks provided available.
This is not only because netbooks are cheap, but also they are enough for me.
What we're really looking for here is a central server (lolcloud) to handle applications we want on all of our devices (office package for example) not putting performance/latency dependent applications on there (which seems to be the fancy of many a tech blogger).
Personally, I would want something on a netbook/slightly bigger scale than having the ever expanding screen of a laptop for 'portable' work. With desktops for when the real business needs to get done.
Hell, at home when working, I connect the laptop to the desktop screen and peripherals to get anything done. Something that could be done using a) the desktop with shared applications from the cloud or b) the much more portalable netbook.
Laptops have so much bloat these days, I don't need a trackpad (a small trackball would be much nicer), a dvd drive (easiliy replaceable by the 'cloud' I keep having rammed down my throat)
To each his own I guess, but I certainly don't want to see the laptop market disappear like you suggest. I never liked netbooks. They seemed too much a ripoff from my perspective. Yes they were cheaper and lighter than most laptops, but for near the same money of a netbook with decent specs you could conceivably find a better laptop at around 15".
As for me, I much prefer a powerful laptop. I've got a 17" Toshiba Satelite, though it's nearly six years old now. I plan on getting a 17" Qosmio about this time next year since my Satelite is so slow at everything compared to my desktop. Wasn't that originally the idea behind laptops? The power of a desktop but portability to carry it with you wherever you go?
Dell doesn't make any notebooks with AMD processors, but they make desktops, so they still have a deal with AMD.
Lenovo has a couple models in the Ideapad line, and 4 different series in the ThinkPad with AMD. HP has many AMD notebooks across all of their product lines (Pavilion, ProBook, and EliteBook). Toshiba has more than 1 model with AMD, and Gateway is owned by Acer, but Acer also has many across it's various brands.
Uh, that was never the idea. Desktops will always outrun a laptop. If you do manage to shoehorn desktop-level parts into a notebook (like alienware does) then it's going to weight 14 pounds and get 30 minutes of battery life. Which means you have to be plugged into something. Which means you should have just gotten a desktop.
That, or people weren't buying them - or figured they could get a discounted Windows license and still install Ubuntu themselves for free after the fact.